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10:33 AM
can someone run this for me in matlab? mat2str (logical ([false true; false false]))
Thank you
 
 
3 hours later…
1:13 PM
@Andy what do you/don't you expect to happen?
I get '[false true;false false]'
@Andy but seriously, those spaces....
 
@flawr it could be [0 1; 0 0] internally I guess
 
@flawr That's an Octave habit. I think it's intended to distinguish function calls and matrix indexing.
 
1:31 PM
@Andy is the logical there not superfluous in Octave?
 
2:14 PM
@CrisLuengo yup
it probably has to do with the ability to chain indexing and function calls
octave:4> colon(1,3)(1,3)
ans =  3
though it could make sense for single expressions too (too bad it looks so bad :P)
but I think flawr knows that
 
2:26 PM
@flawr Octave gets [false false;true false]
what I clearly don't expect
@Dev-iL Ah yet, it is indeed superfluous
 
@Andy That is clearly a bug.
 
I've fixed it on the master branch and an ungly workaound in github.com/octave-de/serialize/commit/…
 
@AndrasDeak Indeed it looks bad. But I’m sure you get used to it if you use it a lot. Just like everything else.
 
3:03 PM
@CrisLuengo sounds like javascript
 
@CrisLuengo but so ungolfy:)
 
3:22 PM
@flawr LOL! The worst offense is to waste characters! :)
Did you try Cody?
I played with it for a while when it first came out. It's like code golfing, but they count nodes in the parse graph rather than characters.
That means you don't get into bad habits with poor variable names. :)
 
4:06 PM
@CrisLuengo I haven't, what is it?
some kind of competition it seems?
 
4:25 PM
@CrisLuengo so they want you to write efficient code?? eeek
@VoB what you can also do is just comparing the convergence to a method that has a higher order of convergence
 
 
2 hours later…
6:45 PM
Sara Chipps on November 13, 2019

In my very first blog post, I wrote about what a personal experience taught me about the Stack Overflow community. I said we were going to step back and re-evaluate how we deliver feedback, how we can improve content quality, and how we can reduce friction between people. I said that our goal is to have the question asking process be painless and beneficial for new people and Stack Overflow veterans alike.    

During this re-evaluation period, we noticed something in our reputation reward system. We give anyone who receives an upvote on an answer ten additional reputation points, but only give five reputation points to people who receive an upvote on a question.  …

lol
 
7:19 PM
I just saw that. Bad idea IMO. I’m going to be even more careful with upvoting questions now...
3
Idiots that posted a 2 sentence question 10 years ago will now have the rep to close vote. Seems right... not!
 
 
2 hours later…
8:59 PM
in Python, 1 min ago, by Andras Deak
Guess I'll have to downvote anything but perfect questions
Masi will be rich
 
 
2 hours later…
10:45 PM
Hi all. I saw activity in an older question today and noticed the historical answers used a function no longer recommend (hist). I provided a new answer with the recommended function (histogram).
I'm not trying to farm rep so if you think this is better served as a community wiki, let me know. Thanks!
 
@SecretAgentMan There's nothing wrong with getting rep for providing correct, up-to-date answers. That is what the rep system is for.
@AndrasDeak Not if they also double the value of a downvote.
 
11:14 PM
@CrisLuengo but they explicitly won't...
 
The other thing they could do is having users stop accumulating rep if they are not active on the site. If it's been a month since you last voted on anything, no more rep for you!
I just think it's odd that people that haven't logged in for years can come back and find themselves with many thousands of reps, but not know anything about proper behavior on the site.
 
meh, I wouldn't expect those users to use the privileges
 
fair enough
 

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